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List of Illustrations,
Acknowledgments,
A Note on the Text,
Introduction,
PART I. LIFE WRITING,
TRAVEL,
Paul Le Jeune. Relation of What Occurred in New France in the Year 1633 (1634),
Edward Taylor. An Atlantic Voyage (1668),
Christopher Sauer. An Early Description of Pennsylvania and the Sea Voyage from Europe (1724),
MISADVENTURE,
Anthony Thacher. The Shipwreck of Anthony Thacher (1684),
Carlos de Sigüenza y Góngora. The Misfortunes of Alonso Ramírez (1690),
CONFESSIONS,
Owen Syllavan. A Short Account of the Life of John—Alias Owen Syllavan (1756),
Thomas Powers. The Narrative and Confession of Thomas Powers, A Negro (1796),
PART II. FEMALE AGENCY,
CAPTIVITIES,
Marie Le Roy and Barbara Leininger. The Narrative of Marie le Roy and Barbara Leininger, for Three Years Captives among the Indians (1759),
Cotton Mather. A Narrative of a Notable Deliverance from Captivity (1697),
Anonymous [Nathaniel Hawthorne]. The Duston Family (1836),
AUTHORSHIP,
Antonetta [Margaretta V. Faugeres]. Inhuman Treatment to a Negro Slave (1791),
Ann Eliza Bleecker. Story of Henry and Anne: Founded on Fact (1791),
PART III. THE CIRCUM-ATLANTIC WORLD,
SLAVERY,
Anonymous. Negro Trade: A Fragment (1787),
[Jean-François de Saint-Lambert]. Zimeo: A Tale (1789),
ENTREPRENEURS,
Antiphilus [Pseudonym]. Memoirs of a Spy (1798),
Philip Freneau. The Inexorable Captain: A Short Story (1788),
PART IV. CULTURES OF PRINT,
ORIENTALISM,
Anonymous. Firnaz and Mirvan: An Eastern Tale (1792),
Sabina [Pseudonym]. Louisa: A Novel (1790),
MIGRANT FICTIONS,
[Nicholas Bricaire de la Dixmerie]. Azakia: A Canadian Story (1783),
Anonymous. The Child of Snow (1792),
SENSATIONALISM,
Anna [Pseudonym]. An Account of a Murder Committed by Mr. J.—Y—, Upon his Family, in December, A.D. 1781 (1796),
Anonymous [Jean-Pierre Claris de Florian]. Valeria: An Italian Tale (1799),
PART V. GHOST STORIES,
GHOSTS,
Cotton Mather. A Narrative of an Apparition which a Gentleman in Boston, had of his Brother, just then Murdered in London (1692),
Anonymous. The Ghost of Falkner Swamp (1744),
Chiricahua. A Chiricahua Woman Visits the Underworld (n.d.),
LEGENDS,
Anonymous [Anna Lætitia Barbauld]. Sir Bertrand: A Fragment. By Mrs. Barbauld (1787),
Washington Irving. The Devil and Tom Walker (1824),
MYTH,
K'iche' Maya. A Maiden's Story (c. 1524),
Penobscot. Corn Mother (n.d.),
Benjamin Franklin. The Origin of Tobacco (1784),
Works Cited,
TRAVEL
PAUL LE JEUNE
Relation of What Occurred in New France in the Year 1633 (1634)
On the 4th, another council was held; I was present with Father Brebeuf, because the embarkation of our Fathers was to be talked over. Sieur de Champlain made his presents, which corresponded in value to those that the Hurons had made him. To accept presents from the Savages is to bind oneself to return an equivalent. A great many things were spoken of in this council; among others, the Hurons asked for the liberation of the Savage prisoner who had recently killed a Frenchman, as I stated above. Sieur de Champlain sought earnestly to make the Hurons understand that it was not right to restore him to liberty; and that, having killed a Frenchman who had done him no harm, he deserved death. The Hurons were satisfied with the reason given them. They spoke also of the friendship contracted between them and the French, saying that it would be greatly strengthened by the Fathers going into their country.
The Hurons were the happiest people in the world. Those who were to embark and to carry the Fathers in their canoes had already received pay for their future trouble; we had placed in their hands the parcels or little baggage of the Fathers. We had gone to the Storehouse to sleep, Father de Nouë and I, with our three Fathers, that we might see them off early the next morning in their little canoes, and might say to them our last farewell, when all at once our joy was changed into sadness. At about ten or eleven o'clock that night, a one-eyed Savage, belonging to the Island tribe, closely allied to the tribe of the prisoner, went among the cabins of all the Savages crying out that they should be careful not to take any Frenchmen in their canoes, and that the relatives of the prisoner were on the watch along the river to kill the Frenchmen, if they could catch them during the passage. On the previous Sunday some Savages of the same tribe as the prisoner had held a council with the captains of the Montagnaits, of the island Savages, and of the Hurons, to determine how they might secure the pardon of this prisoner. The Hurons were besought to ask it. They refused, and this Island Savage, whose tribe was allied to the tribe of the murderer, raised this general cry among the cabins, warning every one not to give passage to a Frenchman, unless they wished to place him in evident danger of his life. Having heard the cry, and Father Brebeuf, who was listening, having interpreted its meaning to me, I went with Father de Nouë to the fort to give information of the same to sieur de Champlain.
We had been sleeping in the storehouse of the French, around which the Savages were encamped. The Fort was opened to us; and, after having made known the object of our night visit, we returned to the place whence we had departed. Upon the way we found the Captains of the Savages in council, to whom the Interpreter, according to the order of sieur de Champlain, declared that he desired to talk to them once more before their departure. The next morning, at daybreak, a Savage passed through the camp proclaiming that they were not to depart that day; and that the young men should keep the peace, and that those who had not sold all their merchandise should sell it. About eight or nine in the morning, sieur de Champlain again assembled the Captains of the Hurons, the Island Savages who had made this outcry, and the Captain of the Montagnaits. He asked the Savage why he had aroused that opposition; he answered that the whole country was in a state of alarm, and that it would be lost if the French were embarked to be taken to the Hurons, for the relatives of the prisoner would not fail to kill some of the party and that thereupon war would be declared; that the Hurons even would be dragged into it; for, if they defended the French, they would be attacked, and that thus the whole country would be lost; that he had not aroused any opposition, but had merely made known the wicked designs of the murderer's relatives; that, if the prisoner were released, these troubles would immediately be ended, and that the river and the whole country would be free.
The Hurons were asked if they still adhered to their wish to take us to their country. They answered that the river was not theirs, and that great caution must be observed in regard to those other tribes, if they were to pass by in security. As far as they were concerned, they asked nothing better than to furnish passage to the French. I observed the discretion of these Savages, for they gave evidence of their affection for...
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Buch. Zustand: Neu. Neuware - Worlding America explores the circulation of short narratives in the early Americas through a combination of neglected primary materials and scholarly commentary. Building on recent reconsiderations of American literature in light of transnational and hemispheric approaches, it follows the migration of stories from various backgrounds and demonstrates how forms and themes developed in a new literary market that spanned the Atlantic world. While short narratives prior to 1800 have been largely excluded from critical discussions as well as anthologies, they give insight into the conditions of publishing and writing as well as the demand for brief, entertaining pieces that was met by a wide variety of sources, including sermons, letters, diaries, travelogues, and, eventually, magazines and newspapers. Breaking with traditional concepts of period, authorship, and genre, Worlding America groups the different types of narratives it anthologizes according to key subject areas such as 'Life Writing,' 'Female Agency,' or the 'Cultures of Print.' Each section is introduced by a headnote that explains relevant historical and literary developments, situating each narrative in its cultural context and providing its publication history. Suggestions for further reading will also be appreciated by scholars and students wishing to pursue research in these underrepresented forms. Artikel-Nr. 9780804790802
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